Memo to Tom Cruise: You're outta here, dude.
John Travolta? Take a hike, Barbarino. Kirstie Alley? Shut up and get your fat **** back on that exercycle.
[ Wikipedia and Scientology have tangled before, and Cringely was there with the play-by-play | Stay up to date on Robert X. Cringely's musings and observations with InfoWorld's Notes from the Underground newsletter. ]
The island of misfit geeks otherwise known as the Wikipedia Arbitration Committee has unceremoniously uninvited the Church of Scientology from contributing to "the peoples' almanac." Wikipedia is now the encyclopedia anyone can edit, except those who believe Xenu will one day return in his DC8 rocket ship to vanquish the church's enemies and free the Thetans.
The WAC is quoted in the UK's Telegraph:
"All IP addresses owned or operated by the Church of Scientology and its associates, broadly interpreted, are to be blocked as if they were open proxies"....Anyone who logs on with these IP addresses will be "prohibited from editing articles related to Scientology or Scientologists, broadly defined."
The reason? Oh, the usual -- a massive organized effort to make the CoS look good and/or counter the relentless public criticism that has shadowed the organization since the earliest days of the Net.
(What? You mean people are editing Wikipedia entries for their own nefarious ends? I am shocked, simply shocked. Wait a second while I spruce up my own entry with an account of that wild weekend last fall with Lindsay Lohan and the Cirque du Soleil acrobats. OK, I'm done now.)
To be fair, the whacky WAC also takes issue with the critics of Scientology, who've been having their own way with various entries. So far, though, they haven't banned 4chan or "Anonymous," though I bet they would if they could just figure out how.
Wikipedia has certainly banned individuals before, and once apparently put the kibosh on an entire mountain in Utah (per The Register). In terms of targeting abusers by their IP address, its accuracy is probably only slightly better than the RIAA's. But this is the first time Wikipedia decided to permanently oust an entire organization, and I suspect it won't be the last.
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Download now »Have the Moonies, Hare Krishnas, World Wide Church of God or Catholics modified their Wikipedia entries to shade the truth? If so, you have a point. If not, then Wikipedia's stand is well taken.
After looking over some hot-button articles at Wikipedia, I have not seen any of the mass-edits or vandalism which is being discussed in this blog entry. Wikipedia entries such as Abortion, Creationism, and Holocaust show little or no evidence of any mass-editing or vandalism of any kind. Maybe the WAC has been active in keeping these entries clean, but no group has been accused or banned for the kinds of vandalism said to have been done by the Church of Scientology.
So I conclude that if these accusations against CoS are true, and their members have engaged in organized and persistent vandalism or mass-editing of Wikipedia pages, then this group has committed a uniquely damaging act, and can legitimately be banned.
If on the other hand, other groups, such as holocaust deniers, pro-lifers, or Moonies and Krishnas have engaged in the same type and level of persistent acts of vandalism or mass-editing, then those groups would also be eligible for banning.
The criteria should be consistently applied, and should relate to the amount of time required to clean up vandalized entries. And I am sure the Wikipedia Terms of Service spell out in great detail what is and is not acceptable when editing entries. CoS must have violated the TOS massively to become the only group I can recall being banned from Wikipedia altogether.
(BTW, if people who leave Comments here could please use HTML tags to separate their paragraphs, not just multiple dashes or underlines, the Comments would be much more readable. Thank you in advance for your cooperation, folks.)
Actually, related to holocaust denyers, pro-abortion folks are more closely related that pro-lifers. Those who believe abortion is Ok are denying a proven fact - the unborn child is a living human being. This was established in the last millenium via DNA testing.
Related to radicals, these exist on both sides of the abortion fence and I don't agree with either of them.
Wikipedia has done the sanest thing in barring those who have nothing to do with science - for that matter anything that is in normal parlance.
After all, wikipedia is for ordinary folks like me and Cringely, not for those obscenely rich. They can make a parallel encyclopedia exclusively for themselves and their beliefs.
S.K

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